出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/16 02:42 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 wassail, from Old Norse ves heill (“be healthy!”), from the imperative of vesa (“to be”) + heill (“healthy”). The earliest documented use of the term is from the first part of the 12th century CE, in Geoffroy of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae (see page's citations).
wassail (countable and uncountable, plural wassails)
wassail (third-person singular simple present wassails, present participle wassailing, simple past and past participle wassailed)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/07/12 18:53 UTC 版)
The word Wassail refers to several related traditions; first and foremost wassailing is an ancient southern English tradition that is performed with the intention of ensuring a good crop of cider apples for the next year's harvest. It also refers to both the salute 'Waes Hail', the term itself is a contraction of the Middle English phrase wæs hæil, meaning literally 'good health' or 'be you healthy' and to the drink of wassail which is a hot mulled cider traditionally drunk as an integral part of the wassail ceremony.
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